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The Guided Tour 25 ➊ Touch the „ key, but don’t lift your finger. The punctuation layout appears. ➋ Slide your finger onto the period or comma key, and release. The ABC layout returns automatically. You’ve typed a period or a comma with one finger touch instead of three. If you’re a two-thumbed typist, you can also hit the „ key with your left thumb, and then tap the punctuation key with your right. It even works on the = sub- punctuation layout, although you’ll probably visit that screen less often. In fact, you can type any of the punctuation symbols the same way. This tech- nique makes a huge difference in the usability of the keyboard. This same trick saves you a finger-press when capitalizing words, too. You can put your finger down on the L key and slide directly onto the letter you want to type in its uppercase version. Or, if you’re a two-handed iPhone typist, you can work the Shift key like the one on your computer: Hold it down with your left thumb, type a letter with your right, and then release both. Chapter 1 26 How the Dictionary Works The iPhone has an English dictionary (minus the definitions) built in. As you type, it compares what you’ve typed against the words in that dictionary (and against the names in your address book). If it finds a match or a partial match, it displays a suggestion just beneath what you’ve typed. If you tap the Space bar to accept the suggestion, wonderful. If you don’t—if you dismiss the suggestion and allow the “mistake” to stand— then the iPhone adds that word to a custom, dynamic dictionary, assuming that you’ve just typed some name, bit of slang, or terminology that wasn’t in its dictionary originally. It dawns on the iPhone that maybe that’s a legitimate word it doesn’t know—and adds it to the dictionary. From now on, in other words, it will accept that bizarre new word as a legitimate word—and, in fact, will even suggest it the next time you type something like it. Words you’ve added to the dictionary actually age. If you stop using some custom term, the iPhone gradually learns to forget it. That’s handy behavior if you never intended for that word to become part of the dictionary to begin with (that is, it was a mistake). If you feel you’ve really made a mess of your custom dictionary, and the iPhone keeps suggesting ridiculous alternate words, you can always start fresh. From the Home screen, tap SettingsÆGeneralÆReset, and then tap Reset Keyboard Dictionary. Now the iPhone’s dictionary is the way it was when it came from the factory, without any of the words it learned from you. International Typing As the iPhone goes on sale around the world, it has to be equipped for non- English languages—and even non-Roman alphabets. Fortunately, it’s ready. To prepare the iPhone for language switching, go to SettingsÆGeneralÆ International. Tap Language to set the iPhone’s primary language (for menus, button labels, and so on). To make other keyboards available, tap Keyboards, and then turn on the key- board layouts you’ll want available: Russian, Italian, whatever. If you choose Japanese or Chinese, you’re offered the chance to specify which kind of character input you want. For Japanese, you can choose a QWERTY layout or a Kana keypad. For Simplified or Traditional Chinese, you have a The Guided Tour 27 choice of the Pinyin input method (which uses a QWERTY layout) or hand- writing recognition, where you draw your symbols onto the screen with your fingertip; a palette of potential interpretations appears to the right. (That’s handy, since there are thousands of characters in Chinese, and you’d need a 65-inch iPhone to fit the keyboard.) Now, when you arrive at any writing area in any program, you’ll discover that a new icon has appeared on the keyboard: a tiny globe ( ˚ ) right next to the Space bar. Each time you tap it, you rotate to the next keyboard you requested earlier. The new language’s name appears briefly on the Space bar to identify it. Thanks to that ˚ button, you can freely mix languages and alphabets within the same document, without having to duck back to some control panel to make the change. And thanks to the iPhone’s virtual keyboard, the actual let- ters on the “keys” change in real time. (As an Apple PR rep puts it, “That’s really hard to do on a BlackBerry.”) Chapter 1 28 Charging the iPhone The iPhone has a built-in, rechargeable battery that fills up a substantial chunk of the iPhone’s interior. How long one charge can drive your iPhone depends on what you’re doing—music playback saps the battery least, Internet (espe- cially 3G Internet) and video sap it the most. But one thing is for sure: Sooner or later, you’ll have to recharge the iPhone. For most people, that’s every other day or (if you use 3G) every night. You recharge the iPhone by connecting the white USB cable (or the white syncing cradle) that came with it. You can plug the far end into either of two places to supply power: Your computer’s USB jack. • Just make sure that the Mac or PC won’t go to sleep while the iPhone is plugged into it. Not only will the battery not charge, but it may actually lose charge if the computer isn’t turned on. The AC adapter. • The little white two-prong cube that came with the iPhone snaps onto the end of the cradle’s USB cable. Unless the charge is really low, you can use the iPhone while it’s charging. If the iPhone is unlocked, the battery icon in the upper-right corner displays The Guided Tour 29 a lightning bolt to let you know that it’s charging. If it’s locked, pressing the Home button shows you a battery gauge big enough to see from space. Battery Life Tips The iPhone 3G’s battery life is either terrific or terrible, depending on your point of view. When accessing the 3G network, it gets longer battery life than any other phone—and yet that’s only 5 hours of talk time, compared with 8 on the original iPhone. But never mind all that; the point is that if you’re not careful, the iPhone 3G’s battery might not even make it through a single day without needing a recharge. So knowing how to scale back its power appetite could come in extremely handy. The biggest wolfers of electricity on your iPhone are its screen and its wireless features. Therefore, you can get longer life from each charge by: Dimming the screen. • In bright light, the screen brightens (but uses more battery power). In dim light, it darkens. This works because of an ambient-light sensor that’s hiding behind the glass above the earpiece. Apple says that it tried having the light sensor active all the time, but it was weird to have the screen constantly dimming and brightening as you used it. So the sensor now samples the ambient light and adjusts the brightness only once—when you unlock the phone after waking it. You can use this information to your advantage. By covering up the sen- sor as you unlock the phone, you force it into a low-power, dim-screen setting (because the phone believes that it’s in a dark room). Or by hold- ing it up to a light as you wake it, you get full brightness. In both cases, you’ve saved all the taps and navigation it would have taken you to find the manual brightness slider in Settings (page 302). Turning off 3G. • If you don’t see a 3 icon on your iPhone 3G’s status bar, then you’re not in a 3G hot spot (page 11), and you’re not getting any benefit from the phone’s battery-hungry 3G radio. By turning it off, you’ll double the length of your iPhone 3G’s battery power, from 5 hours of talk time to 10. To do so, from the Home screen, tap SettingsÆGeneralÆNetworkÆ Enable 3G Off. Yes, this is sort of a hassle, but if you’re anticipating a long Chapter 1 30 day and you can’t risk the battery dying halfway through, it might be worth doing. After all, most 3G phones don’t even let you turn off their 3G circuitry. Turning off Wi-Fi. • From the Home screen, tap SettingsÆWi-FiÆOn/Off. If you’re not in a wireless hot spot anyway, you may as well stop the thing from using its radio. Or, at the very least, tell the iPhone to stop searching for Wi-Fi networks it can connect to. Page 299 has the details. Turning off the phone, too. • In Airplane mode, you shut off both Wi-Fi and the cellular radios, saving the most power of all. Page 120 has details. Turning off Bluetooth. • If you’re not using a Bluetooth headset, then for heaven’s sake shut down that Bluetooth radio. In Settings, tap General, and turn off Bluetooth. Turning off GPS. • If you won’t be needing the iPhone to track your loca- tion, save it the power required to operate the GPS chip and the other location circuits. In Settings, tap General, and turn off Location Services. Turning off “push” data. • If your email, calendar, and address book are kept constantly synced with your Macs or PCs, then you’ve probably got- ten yourself involved with Yahoo Mail, Microsoft Exchange (Chapter 15), or MobileMe (Chapter 14). It’s pretty amazing to know that your iPhone is constantly kept current with the mothership—but all that continual sniff- ing of the airwaves, looking for updates, costs you battery power. If you can do without the immediacy, visit SettingsÆFetch New Data; consider turning off Push and letting your iPhone check for new information, say, every 15, 30, or 60 minutes. Finally, beware of 3-D games and other add-on programs (Chapter 11), which can be serious power hogs. And turn off EQ when playing your music (page 89). Rearranging the Home Screen As you install more and more programs on your iPhone—and that will hap- pen fast once you discover the iPhone App Store (Chapter 11)—you’ll need more and more room for their icons. The standard Home screen can’t hold more than 20 icons. So where are all your games, video recorders, and tip calculators supposed to go? Easy: You’ll make more room for them by creating additional Home screens. The Guided Tour 31 You can spread your new programs’ icons across several such launch screens. To enter Home-Screen Surgery Mode, hold your finger down on any icon until, after about 1 second, all icons begin to—what’s the correct term?—wiggle. (That’s got to be a first in user-interface history.) You can even move an icon onto the Dock (the strip of four exalted icons that appear on every Home screen). You just make room for it by first dragging an existing Dock icon to another spot on the screen. At this point, you can rearrange your icons by dragging them around the glass into new spots; the other icons scoot aside to make room. To create an additional Home screen, drag a wiggling icon to the right edge of the screen; keep your finger down. The first Home screen slides off to the left, leaving you on a new, blank one, where you can deposit the icon. You can create up to nine Home screens in this way. You can organize your icons on these Home pages by category, frequency of use, color, or whatever tickles your fancy. Wiggling icons Dots = Home screens Drag to a new spot Dock Chapter 1 32 When everything looks good, press the Home button to stop the wiggling. To move among the screens, swipe horizontally—or tap to the right or the left of the little dots to change screens. (The little dots show you where you are among the screens.) Restoring the Home Screen If you ever need to undo all the damage you’ve done, tap SettingsÆGeneralÆ ResetÆReset Home Screen Layout. That function preserves any new pro- grams you’ve installed, but it consolidates them. If you’d put 10 programs on each of four Home screens, you wind up with only two screens, each packed with 20 icons. Any leftover blank pages are eliminated. Phone Calls 33 Phone Calls A s you probably know, using the iPhone in the U.S. means choosing AT&T Wireless as your cellphone carrier. If you’re a Verizon, Sprint, or T-Mobile fan, too bad. AT&T (formerly Cingular) has the iPhone exclusively at least until 2012. Why did Apple choose AT&T? For two reasons. First, because Apple wanted a GSM carrier (page 8). Second, because of the way the cellphone world traditionally designs phones. It’s the carrier, not the cellphone maker, that wears the pants, makes all the decisions, and wields veto power over any feature. That’s why so much traditional cellphone software is so alike—and so terrible. On this particular phone, however, Apple intended to make its own deci- sions, and so it required carte-blanche freedom to maneuver. AT&T agreed to let Apple do whatever it liked—without even knowing what the machine was going to be! AT&T was even willing to rework its voicemail system to accommodate Apple’s Visual Voicemail idea (page 57). In fact, to keep the iPhone under Apple’s cloak of invisibility, AT&T engi- neering teams each received only a piece of it so that nobody knew what it all added up to. Apple even supplied AT&T with a bogus user interface to fake them out! Making Calls Suppose the “number of bars” logo in the upper-left corner of the iPhone’s screen tells you that you’ve got cellular reception. You’re ready to start a conversation. Well, almost ready. The iPhone offers four ways to dial, but all of them require that you first be in the Phone application (program). 2 Chapter 2 34 To get there: ➊ Go Home, if you’re not already there. Press the Home button. ➋ Tap the Phone icon. It’s usually at the bottom of the Home screen. (The tiny circled number in the corner of the Phone icon tells you how many missed calls and voicemail messages you have.) How’s this for a shortcut? You can skip both steps by double-pressing the Home button. You go directly to the Favorites; see page 310 for the setup. Now you’ve arrived in the Phone program. A new row of icons appears at the bottom, representing the four ways of dialing: Favorites list. • Here’s the iPhone’s version of speed-dial keys: It lists the 50 people you think you most frequently call. Tap a name to make the call. (For details on building and editing this list, see page 49.) Recents list. • Every call you’ve made, answered, or missed recently appears in this list. Missed callers’ names appear in red lettering, which makes them easy to spot—and easy to call back. [...]... to get to the T’s, use the A to Z index down the right edge of the screen You can tap the last-name initial letter you want (R, or W, or whatever) Alternatively, you can drag your finger up or down the index The list scrolls in real time Third, you can use the new Search box at the very top of the list, above the A’s (If you don’t see it, tap the tiny  icon at the top of the A to Z index on the right... Ordinarily, the Contacts list sorts names alphabetically, either by first name or last name (page 314) There’s no way to sort it by company name or is there? Yes, there is When you’re creating a contact, tap the First Last box—but enter only a company name (in the Company box) Then save the entry If you bother to go all the way back to Contacts, you’ll see that the entry is now alphabetized by the company... tell the first person, “If I lose you, I’ll call you back.” Suppose you’re on a call Now then, here’s how you can: • Make an outgoing call Tap Add Call The iPhone puts the first person on hold—neither of you can hear each other—and returns you to the Phone program and its various phone-number lists You can now make a second call just the way you made the first The top of the screen makes clear that the. .. Contact on the Fly There’s actually another way to add someone to your Contacts list—a faster, on -the- fly method that’s more typical of cellphones Start by bringing the phone number up on the screen: • Tap Home, then Phone, then Keypad Dial the number, and then tap the ø button • You can also add a number that’s in your Recents (recent calls) list, storing it in Contacts for future use Tap the O button... erase the entire list, thus ruling out the chance that a coworker or significant other might discover your illicit activities, tap Clear at the top of the screen You’ll be asked to confirm your decision (There’s no way to delete individual items in this list.) The Keypad The last way to place a call is to tap Keypad at the bottom of the screen The standard iPhone dialing pad appears It’s just like the. .. normal cellphone, except that the “keys” are much bigger and you can’t feel them To make a call, tap out the numbers—use the V key to backspace if you make a mistake—and then tap the green Call button You can also use the keypad to enter a phone number into your Contacts list, thanks to the little ø icon in the corner See page 48 for details 54 Chapter 2 Overseas Calling The iPhone is a quad-band GSM... numbers from the U.S., the scheme is simple: • North America (Canada, Puerto Rico, Caribbean) Dial 1, the area code, and the number, just like any other long-distance call • Other countries Dial 011, the country code, the city or area code, and the local number How do you know the country code? Let Google be your friend Instead of dialing 011, you can just hold down the 0 key That produces the + symbol,... said enough • If the iPhone is asleep or locked, the screen lights up and says, “slide to answer.” If you slide your finger as indicated by the arrow, you simultaneously unlock the phone and answer the call • If you’re wearing earbuds, the music nicely fades out and then pauses; you hear the ring both through the phone’s speaker and through your earbuds Answer by squeezing the clicker on the right earbud... create or delete groups on the iPhone, but at least the groups from your Mac or PC get synced over to the iPhone To see them, tap Groups at the top of the Contacts list If you do use the Groups feature, remember to tap the group name you want (or tap All Contacts) before you create a new contact That’s how you put someone into an existing group 44 Chapter 2 ➋ Tap the First Last box The onscreen keyboard... notation at the top of the Call Details screen: the city and state where the calling phone is registered Phone Calls 53 • To save you scrolling, the Recents list thoughtfully combines consecutive calls to or from the same person If some obsessive ex-lover has been calling you every 10 minutes for 4 hours, you’ll see “Chris Meyerson (24 )” in the Recents list (Tap the O button to see the exact times of the calls.) . down the index. The list scrolls in real time. Third, you can use the new Search box at the very top of the list, above the A’s. (If you don’t see it, tap the tiny  icon at the top of the A. looks good, press the Home button to stop the wiggling. To move among the screens, swipe horizontally—or tap to the right or the left of the little dots to change screens. (The little dots show. ready. The iPhone offers four ways to dial, but all of them require that you first be in the Phone application (program). 2 Chapter 2 34 To get there: ➊ Go Home, if you’re not already there.

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